HNA History
HNA History
HNA In the beginning…
Principal Rose Dixon instigated the creation of Hodgin Neighborhood Association. She contacted parents whom she knew at the school who were active and initiated a meeting with the city. Mary Lou Haywood Spells was the coordinator of the Office of Neighborhood Coordination at the time and she lived and still lives in our neighborhood.
With her expert guidance and the support of Hodgin Elementary, we elected a board, selected our name, wrote by-laws and became a recognized neighborhood association. We came into existence in April of 1995. Over the past years we have waxed and waned. We almost lost our recognition with the city, but throughout our existence we have had good neighbors who agree to serve on the board and volunteer, time, talent and money to make our little community welcoming, safe, and neighborly. Before the proliferation of on -line information and publications we used to deliver a wonderful quarterly newsletter to every door and many businesses within our boundary.
We are indebted to all of those living and deceased who have served Hodgin Neighbor- hood Association and we thank each of them for their contributions to make it a great place to live.
Cathy lntemann – December 23, 2020
Charles Hodgin
We are proud that our neighborhood is named after
Charles Elkanah Hodgin
Born: August 21, 1858
Died: September, 1934
Charles E. Hodgin was born in (Terre Haute ?) Indiana, August 21, 1858.
With the newly built transcontinental railroad extension into the territory of New Mexico, the young Quaker came to Albuquerque in 1885 on account of the ill health of his wife.
New Mexico was sill a territory in 1885 when Charles Hodgin arrived in Albuquerque. It was admitted to the Union as the 47th state on January 6, 1912.
Freshly arrived, Hodgin taught at the Highland school, after which he taught in the intermediate department of the Albuquerque Academy before becoming principal for four years.
A champion of public education, Hodgin was one of the organizers of the Educational Association of New Mexico Territory in 1886, and served as president in two different years. As a delegate to the National Association held in San Francisco, he was elected its sixth vice-president.
At the organization of the city schools (APS) in 1891, he was elected their Superintendent, a position he held “constantly and efficiently” throughout his tenure.
During his twelve years teaching in the Albuquerque Public Schools (1885-1897), the first building of the liberal arts New Mexico Normal School was completed (1892). Hodgin concurrently attended what is now known as the University of New Mexico, and graduated as a member of the university’s first graduating class of 1894.
The first building still stands and is currently the University of New Mexico Administration Building. In 1936, the building was posthumously renamed Hodgin Hall in honor of Professor Charles Hodgin. Hodgin had advanced from his position as principal of the prep school [Albuquerque Academy?] to become head of education, dean, and vice president over his 28 years (1897-1925) at UNM.
Students of New Mexican educational history equate not only race but religion with the early denials of access to the concepts of Anglo learning. Jane C. Atkins, author of a 1982 prize-winning UNM dissertation, detected a Protestant bias against the predominantly Catholic faith of the Hispano population. William G. Ritch, a Wisconsin native appointed territorial secretary in 1873, told his superiors in Washington that Catholicism was rife with “superstition,” and that “the Church wanted to keep its communicants ignorant.” Ritch voiced the sentiments of the notorious “Santa Fe Ring” of merchants, lawyers, landowners, and federal officials of New Mexico’s Gilded Age who saw little value in uplifting the masses when the territory’s resources and labor provided the “Ring” with economic and political opportunity.
Not until the arrival in the 1880s of the transcontinental railroad did competing ideas of economic development touch New Mexico. Even then, the focus upon Anglo superiority would go unquestioned.
One example was the pronouncement of William Hazeldine, a judge in the small community of New Albuquerque, east of the heavily Hispano Old Town along the Rio Grande. He spoke at the ceremony in April 1880 honoring the completion of the rail line from Kansas City to central New Mexico, remarking that its presence meant that “knowledge, education, and advancement and progress shall be the right of our people.”
Hazeldine’s prediction came true within months of the opening of New Mexico to rapid transportation to and from the East. One of the earliest educators to step off the train was Charles E. Hodgin, a young Quaker from Indiana who would teach for twelve years (1885-1897) in the Albuquerque Public Schools (APS), and then serve UNM for the next 28 years (1897-1925) in a variety of capacities.
Retiring with the old UNM administration building [posthumously] named in his honor, Hodgin was painfully honest about the multicultural world revolving around Albuquerque. In a 1907 letter to a friend in Terre Haute, Indiana, he wrote that teaching in the New Mexican town was “the hardest work of my life.” While conditions were typical of most frontier locale’s (isolation, distance, a transient population, and poverty), Hodgin considered ethnicity to be his greatest challenge in New Mexico. He labored to “bring system out of a chaotic and cosmopolitan condition,” which he attributed to the amalgamation in his classes of “Mexicans, Indians, Negroes, Chinamen, etc., along with representatives of the more highly developed nationalities.”?, Without knowing it, the venerable Hodgin described one of the ironies of New Mexican ethnic history, and one which historians have yet to address in much detail: how modernization only exacerbated the class and ethnic differences in the territory. Nowhere was this more apparent than in the “Duke City” of the late nineteenth century. Since the days of the fur trappers and traders, the Hispano elite, known as “ricos,” had joined with Anglo newcomers to secure economic advantage from the growing urban-industrial society of the East. New Mexican scholars write often about tension between the races, but less so about the alliance of Hispano and Anglo in the making of the Gilded Age economy.
This led to an interesting debate in the territorial legislature in the winter of 1888-89, as the young Irish lawyer Bernard S. Rodey introduced legislation to create the first New Mexican network of higher education. Upon the official “reading” of the “Omnibus Bill,” several Hispano lawmakers realized that Anglo-dominated communities had secured the choice facilities: Las Cruces for the land-grant school (the future New Mexico State University) and Albuquerque for the liberal arts campus.